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"Grimaldi's Garden is Susan Knight's second novel -- and a very fine one it
is, too. A disparate group of characters is in search of an apotheosis...
A kind of a fairy-tale but one with a sturdy clarity of vision and
in no way cloying. Perhaps a surfeit of themes at times, especially
in the realm of sexual possibility, but a sure hand and an exactness
of vision see Ms Knight through."
Vincent Banville, the Irish Times
"Susan Knight's second novel, Grimaldi's Garden flies along in a rushing
series of vignettes that gradually intermingle the lives of her
characters, most of whom 'keep moving to disguise the fact that
they are standing still'. The title comes from the true story of
Joseph Grimaldi, an Italian immigrant so oppressed by the greyness
of London'that he filled his garden with paper flowers, transforming
winter into summer. Knight's characters follow a similar course
but this is not an escapist action in the usual sense. Rather they
are escaping from the need to escape as their despair gives way
to something more positive."
Reader's Choice, Giovanni Malito. Irish Times.
"Knight paints a picture of a contemporary Ireland. A place where individuals
can find true happiness only outside their routine, mundane lives.
The plot weaves together the lives of the dozen-plus population
of Grimaldi's Garden. These portraits, initially disconcerting in
their abruptness, develop into longer continuously shuffled cameos
to reveal the metamorphosis the personas undergo. The writing is
pacey, with the odd, jolting, cumbersome word.
Grimaldi's Garden may begin with the
banality of the suburbs, but it ends up somewhere decidely more
urbane. And along the way we are fed the tedium of humdrum lives.
But appearances are deceptive. As we learn how precious little we
know about those we think we know, the story looks at life from
a different perspective; takes a glimpse beyond the obvious."
Ger Philpott, Sunday Tribune
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